-
You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization.You install a new Client Access server in the organization.You need to verify whether users can access the new Client Access server by using Outlook Web App. What should you do?()
A . From the Exchange Best Practices Analyzer, run a baseline scan.
B . From the Exchange Management Shell, run the Test-OwaConnectivity cmdlet.
C . From the Exchange Management Console (EMC), examine the properties of the default Outlook Web App mailbox policy.
D . From the Internet Information Services (IIS) Manager, view the session state settings for the Outlook Web Access virtual directory.
-
Rose()two cousins in New York
A . has got
B . having got
C . is having
-
New York Minute
-
Liz Murray was sponsored by the New York Times.
-
In order for a taxicab to be operated in New York City, it must have a licence . Licence s are expensive, but can be resold, and are therefore an example of
-
Frank Chin’s play, The Chickencoop Chinaman (1971) became the first play by an Asian American to be produced as a major New York production.
-
My train arrives in New York at eight o’clock tonight. The plane I would like to take fromthere____by then.
-
During the second half of 1776, the British had driven Washington's armies from their strongholds in and near New York City. Washington retreated, moving southeast across New Jersey.
Before his army reached the shores of the Delaware, he sent soldiers ahead to bring together all the boats they could find. When the British arrived at the east bank early in December, the Colonials were safely across. And the British could find only two small boats on a pond.
For the time being, the British gave up the chase. They set up camp at Trenton and at other strongholds along the Delaware.
Washington had the boats on the Pennsylvania side, but that was about all he had. Food was short, and many soldiers were too iii to march. And any day now, the river might freeze, making it possible for the British force to cross into Pennsylvania.
If the struggle for freedom was to continue, Washington had to have a victory. Finally he decided to re-cross the Delaware at Mckonkey's Ferry. That was nine miles up river from Trenton. Washington's plan was to cross under cover of darkness on Christmas night and attack the 2,000 to 3,000 British soldiers in Trenton. The general expected that the enemy force would still be celebrating the holiday. On the evening of December 25, Washington gave the orders to cross. It was sleeting snowing, and the river was filled with floating ice. Finally, his force of more than 2,000 men was on the Jersey side. It was after 2 a.m.. In a battle that lasted less than two hours, they defeated the enemy force. Washington had the victory he needed.
This story is about______.
A.the battle for human rights and progress
B.the battle of Delaware River
C.the American Civil War
D.the American War of Independence
-
The statement "an 800-pound gorilla" (Line 5, Para. 2) implies that ______ .A.New York is
The statement "an 800-pound gorilla" (Line 5, Para. 2) implies that ______ .
A.New York is a market in big potential profit
B.New York is a city consuming lots of energy
C.New York is a city with rich energy resources
D.New York is the slowest taking energy conservation
-
On New Year's Eve, New York City holds an outdoor______whieh attracts a crowd of a million or more people.
A.incident
B.event
C.case
D.affair
-
The young artist had not expected to find such an ideal attic in that______building, which had been abandoned several years earlier by a sewing machine manufacturer.
A.run-off
B.run-down
C.run-about
D.run-away
-
听力原文: A classical guitarist was thrilled to hear from New York City police that his valuable guitar had been found. (32) It disappeared almost a year ago when he got out of a taxicab and forgot to take the guitar with him.
Laurence Lennon, 44, said he was running late that day. He was talking to his manager on his cell phone when he dashed out of the cab. He said that he gave the driver $60 and told him to keep the change. He walked through the front doors of the concert hall still talking on the phone to his manager.
Upon discovering his loss, Lennon used his cell phone to call the police. (33) The policewoman asked him for the name of the cab company, the number of the cab, and the name of the driver. He said that she had to be kidding.
She told Lennon that he could file a missing items report at the police station or online. (34) She told him that finding the guitar might take a couple of years, as finding guitars was not as important as finding murderers and drug-takers.
Lennon considered that year depressing, as he had to postpone the recording of two new CDs. He has been using borrowed guitars, and he was losing hope of ever recovering his guitar.
Lennon was reunited with his $100,000 guitar yesterday. The case and the guitar had been discovered in the comer of a coffeehouse only two blocks from where Lennon had lost it in the first place. Lennon had offered a$ 10,000 reward for its return. (35)He said he would give the reward to the coffeehouse owner, who had found the guitar and notified the police. The police department prepared a news release about its success in tracking down the guitar.
(33)
A.Two years ago, in a taxicab.
B.Two years ago, in a coffeehouse.
C.One year ago, in a taxicab.
D.One year ago, in a coffeehouse.
-
Amsterdam -- New York Twice Weekly Comfortable by Airbus-310 in First, Business or Economy Class ______ .
A.There are one flight every two weeks.
B.Two kinds of classes are available.
C.There are two flights every week.
-
The ring gesture, where you form. an "O" by holding the tip of your forefinger to the
tip of your thumb, means in France that you think something is_____.
A. good
B. "I'll kill you!”
C. worthless
D. great
-
"Did you enjoy your vacation in New York City?"" Very much. We had a good time _______?
A. the visiting of museums
B. for museum visiting
C. visiting the museums
D. to visit the museums
-
How long did it take for a letter sent by a post rider to reach the addressee between NewHow long did it take for a letter sent by a post rider to reach the addressee between New York and Boston
-
The telecity is a city whose life, direction, and functioning are largely shaped by telecommunications. In the twenty first century, cities will be based more and more on an economy that is dependent on services and intellectual property. Telecommunications and information networks will define a city's architecture, shape, and character. Proximity in the telecity will be defined by the speed and bandwidth of networks as much as by geographical propinquity. In the age of the telecity, New York and Singapore may be closer than, say, New York and Arkadelphia, Arkansas.
Telecities will supersede megacities for several reasons, including the drive toward clean air, reducing pollution, energy conservation, more jobs based on services, and coping with the high cost of urban property. Now we must add the need to cope with terrorist threats in a high-technology world.
Western mind-sets were clearly jolted in the wake of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center in New York City and attacks in Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, and else where. But the risks posed by twentieth-century patterns of urbanization and architecture have ye to register fully with political figures and leaders of industry. The Pentagon, for example, has been rebuilt in situation rather than distributed to multiple locations and connected by secure landlines and broadband wireless systems. Likewise, the reconstruction of the World Trade Center complex still represents a massive concentration of humanity and infrastructure. This is a remarkably shortsighted and dangerous vision of the future.
The security risks, economic expenses, and environmental hazards of over-centralization are everywhere, and they do not stop with skyscrapers and large governmental structures. There are risks also at seaports and airports, in food and water supplies, at nuclear power plants and hydroelectric turbines at major dams, in transportation systems, and in information and communications systems.
This vulnerability applies not only to terrorist threats but also to human error, such as system-wide blackouts in North America in August 2003 and in Italy in September 2003, and natural disasters such as typhoons, hurricanes, floods, and earthquakes. Leaders and planners are only slowly becoming aware that overcentralized facilities are the most vulnerable to attack or catastrophic destruction.
There is also growing awareness that new broadband electronic systems now allow governments and corporations to safeguard their key assets and people in new and innovative ways. So far, corporations have been quickest to adjust to these new realities, and some governments have begun to adjust as well.
Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?
A.The telecity is a TV manufacturing city.
B.The telecity is a city of the speed and bandwidth of networks.
C.Singapore is closer to New York than Arkadelphia, Arkansas is in telecity age.
D.Singapore is actually closer to New York than Arkadelphia, Arkansas.
-
New York City is the urban center of New York in New York State.
A:正确;
B:错误
-
Peace studies in Geneva and New York would offer an insight that couldn't be matched in Nebraska.
A.Y
B.N
C.NG
-
By and by he discovered that the black night had changed to gray, bringing new hope to him.
A.So long
B.Befbre long
C.In advance
D.By chance
-
Late-night comedians had a field day in the summer of 2002 when a lawsuit accusing McDonald's of making two teenage customers in New York fat and unhealthy was filed.
But thousands of restaurant owners were not amused:Pelman v. McDonald's was the second time in a month that lawyers had tried to hold food companies responsible for America's obesity crisis.
Food and restaurant companies, fearing they would be hammered with enormous judgments, as the tobacco industry was. immediately began fighting back, waging an aggressive campaign to make it impossible for anyone to sue them successfully for causing obesity or obesity-related health problems.
Almost three years later, they have had astounding success. Twenty states have enacted versions of a"commonsense consumption"law. They vary slightly in substance, but all prevent lawsuits seeking personal injury damages related to obesity from ever being tried in their courts. Another 11 states have similar legislation pending.
Although plaintiffs' lawyers are confident there are ways around the new state laws, the measures, along with a class- action overhaul bill President Bush signed into law this year, will probably make it harder for lawyers in obesity cases to win the kind of large awards seen in tobacco cases.
The National Restaurant Association, based in Washington, and its 50 state organizations, which represent large chains like McDonald's and small independent businesses, led the campaign. In most states, lobbyists for food companies and restaurants helped write the legislation and did much of the legwork in state capitols.
Restaurant owners and food company executives personally visited state lawmakers, testified at hearings and steered campaign contributions to pivotal lawmakers. Executives from Kraft and Coca-Cola showed up in Texas, for instance, to lobby for that state' s commonsense consumption bill, which was signed into law by Gov. RickPerry last month.
According to data from the Institute on Money in State Politics. a nonpartisan research group based in Helena, Mont. , in the 2002 and 2004 election cycles, the food and restaurant industry gave a total of $5. 5 million to politicians in the 20 states that have passed laws shielding companies from obesity liability.
Adoption of commonsense consumption laws by almost half the states reveals how an organized and impassioned lobbying effort, combined with a receptive legislative climate, can quickly alter the legal framework on a major public health issue like obesity.
Consumer advocates, who knew about the state efforts but were preoccupied trying to prevent similar measures from being enacted on a national level, are not pleased. Michael Jacobson executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, calls it "shameful" that food companies are trying to get special exemptions from lawsuits.
"If someone is saying that a 64-ounce soda at 7-Eleven contributed to obesity, that person should have his day in court, "Mr. Jacobson said. "If it's frivolous, the courts are accustomed to throwing those out. "
The purpose of the "commonsense consumption" law is to_____.
A.to protect the customers' rights in obesity cases
B.to shield the food companies from obesity charges
C.to uphold the judicial justice
D.both A and C
-
Martin stated that he had set______apart from other hip-hop artists by trying to elevate rap music to new heights.
A.himself
B.themselves
C.his
D.theirs
-
New York is also called().
A.the Apple
B.Sam' s apple
C.apple pie
D.big Apple
-
{TSE}Text 3 I had an experience some years ago which taught me something about the ways in which peoplemake a bad situation worse by blaming themselves. One January, I had to officiate at two funerals onsuccessive days for two elderly women in my communi
A、They lived out a natural life
B、They died of exhaustion after the long plane ride
C、They weren’t accustomed to the change in weather
D、They died due to lack of care by family members